John 13:31
Therefore, when he was gone out, Jesus said, Now is the Son of man glorified, and God is glorified in him.
Cross-references
John 12:23 states 'The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified' — virtually identical to the declaration here.
John 12:28 records Jesus praying for the Father to glorify his name — a request now declared fulfilled in this verse.
John 14:13 reinforces that the Father is glorified in the Son — the same truth Jesus states here about the coming events.
John 17:1-6 expands the same theme: Jesus prays for the Father to glorify him so that he may glorify the Father.
John 7:18 contrasts self-glory with seeking God's glory — Jesus here exemplifies seeking the Father's glory through his own glorification.
John 8:54 says the Father glorifies Jesus, not himself — John 13:31 confirms that mutual glorification is now happening.
John 17:4 declares Jesus glorified the Father by finishing his work — here Jesus announces that glorification is now unfolding through the cross.
John 12:16 notes that after glorification the disciples understood — here Jesus announces the glorification that will bring understanding.
John 11:4 says Lazarus's sickness is for God's glory and the Son's glorification — this verse echoes that same purpose now reaching its climax.
John 18:1 moves Jesus toward the arrest and cross — the glorification announced in John 13:31 is about to be enacted.
John 16:14 teaches that the Spirit will glorify Jesus — here Jesus announces that the glorification process has begun.
Revelation 5:9-14 shows the cosmic worship resulting from the Lamb's glorification, fulfilling the glory declared here.
1 Peter 1:21 says God raised Jesus and gave him glory — the same glorification Jesus anticipates, now fulfilled.
Philippians 2:11 explicitly says every tongue confesses Jesus as Lord to the glory of God the Father — directly echoing Jesus' statement.
2 Corinthians 4:4-6 calls Christ the image of God whose glory shines into hearts — the very glory Jesus says is now revealed.
Acts 3:13 explicitly states that God glorified his servant Jesus — directly echoing the declaration here.
Acts 2:36 proclaims the result of this glorification: God has made Jesus both Lord and Christ through his exaltation.
Isaiah 49:3 depicts the Servant in whom God will be glorified — a type of Christ fulfilling that role here.
Hebrews 12:2 describes Jesus enduring the cross for the joy of exaltation — here Jesus announces that glorification through the cross begins now.
Psalm 21:5 declares the king's glory through God's salvation, paralleling Jesus being glorified in His saving work.